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Premature Deaths,Statistical Lives,and Years of Life Lost: Identification,Quantification, and Valuation of Mortality Risks
Authors:James K Hammitt  Peter Morfeld  Jouni T Tuomisto  Thomas C Erren
Institution:1. Harvard University (Center for Risk Analysis & Center for Health Decision Science), Boston, MA, USA and Toulouse School of Economics, Université Toulouse Capitole, Toulouse, France;2. Ruhr-Universität Bochum, University of Cologne (Institute and Policlinic for Occupational Medicine, Environmental Medicine and Prevention Research), Köln, Germany;3. National Institute for Health and Welfare, Kuopio, Finland;4. University of Cologne (Institute and Policlinic for Occupational Medicine, Environmental Medicine and Prevention Research), Köln, Germany
Abstract:Mortality effects of exposure to air pollution and other environmental hazards are often described by the estimated number of “premature” or “attributable” deaths and the economic value of a reduction in exposure as the product of an estimate of “statistical lives saved” and a “value per statistical life.” These terms can be misleading because the number of deaths advanced by exposure cannot be determined from mortality data alone, whether from epidemiology or randomized trials (it is not statistically identified). The fraction of deaths “attributed” to exposure is conventionally derived as the hazard fraction (R – 1)/R, where R is the relative risk of mortality between high and low exposure levels. The fraction of deaths advanced by exposure (the “etiologic” fraction) can be substantially larger or smaller: it can be as large as one and as small as 1/e (≈0.37) times the hazard fraction (if the association is causal and zero otherwise). Recent literature reveals misunderstanding about these concepts. Total life years lost in a population due to exposure can be estimated but cannot be disaggregated by age or cause of death. Economic valuation of a change in exposure-related mortality risk to a population is not affected by inability to know the fraction of deaths that are etiologic. When individuals facing larger or smaller changes in mortality risk cannot be identified, the mean change in population hazard is sufficient for valuation; otherwise, the economic value can depend on the distribution of risk reductions.
Keywords:Attributable death  disability-adjusted life year  environmental burden of disease  hazard fraction  premature death  value per statistical life  years of live lost
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